A number of people supporting President Donald Trump’s attempt to temporarily ban travelers from six majority Muslim countries launched a call to boycott the state of Hawaii Thursday, one day after a federal judge in the Aloha State blocked Trump’s recently revised travel ban.

AP Photo/Marco Garcia

Hawaii attorney general Douglas Chin, from left, with Hawaii Gov. David Ige and Oregon attorney general Ellen Rosenblum, speaks at a press conference Wednesday, March 15, 2107, in Honolulu.

Hawaii attorney general Douglas Chin, from left, with Hawaii Gov. David Ige and Oregon attorney general Ellen Rosenblum, speaks at a press conference Wednesday, March 15, 2107, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia)

The ruling by the judge at the Federal District Court in Honolulu has since been followed by a similar stay by a federal judge in Maryland. But the island state quickly became the focus of Trump supporters’ ire and the travel ban.

The hashtag #BoycottHawaii took off on Twitter on Thursday morning after several people said they would no longer travel to the island state in the Pacific Ocean, a popular vacationing destination for many Americans.

Helping the hashtag flourish as a trending topic? Others who dismissed the attempt to boycott Hawaii.

The hashtag, of course, attracted some politicians, too. The Twitter account for the Tennessee GOP said, fine, let Hawaii take all the refugees. California Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Los Angeles, predicted Trump supporters would then boycott the state of Maryland where a second judge issued a similar ruling blocking the ban.

While touring Tennessee on Wednesday, Trump offered his reaction to the travel ban block to a rally crowd gathered in Nashville. He said the “watered-down version” of the travel ban should have never been blocked and that federal judges are overstepping their authority. The new ban follows an earlier executive order from Trump that was blocked by federal courts in early February

“This is the opinion of many: An unprecedented judicial overreach,” Trump said on Wednesday. “We’re gonna fight this terrible ruling. We’re going to take our case as far as it needs to go including all the way up to the Supreme Court.”